"Her owner was becoming wary and even scared of her," Ayu Budi Handayani, a veterinarian with International Animal Rescue (IAR), said. "He no longer wanted to hold or handle her for fear she would bite him."

"Although she is clearly used to being around dogs, she won't be socializing with dogs in our center," Lis Key, spokesperson for IAR, told The Dodo. "Wild orangutans would have no opportunity to meet dogs in the forest, particularly as they spend most of their time off the ground in the trees."

"Utat was suffering from very sparse hair and dry, flaky skin - and she also smelt very bad," Handayani said. "This was no doubt a result of her diet: The poor creature was mostly fed on rice and salted fish, or rice on its own, flavored with monosodium glutamate (MSG)."

"Having been without her mother since she was a tiny baby, she has never been taught the skills she will need to survive in the wild," IAR wrote. "Now she will have to learn from the other orangutans."